Sunday, March 27, 2016

ATC tower giving wrong aviation weather information to pilots

Kathmandu, March 27

The Department of Hydrology and Meteorology, as well as the Air Traffic Control tower, often provide wrong aviation meteorology information to pilots though meteorological observations and reports for air navigation have a direct link to aviation safety.

Talking to this daily, the pilots said they constantly got misleading meteorological information from the service providers.

“Tower informed us that there was some 3 km of visibility this morning but DHM’s update showed it to be less than 1.5 km while Kathmandu was engulfed by haze,” a senior captain told this daily recounting the communication with the air traffic control tower at Tribhuvan International Airport.

Wrong transmission of such sensitive information could invite disaster, he said. The pilots who mainly fly Boeing 757-200 need at least 2.8 km of visibility for landing at TIA.

Not only at TIA, pilots have also been facing a tough time at Lukla-based Tenzing Hillary Airport while they prepare for landing at the world’s most dangerous airport.

“Information being provided by Lukla tower is not sufficient and is often miscalculated and misleading,” said a domestic airlines pilot who flies daily to Lukla with climbers and trekkers on board.

According to him, there is an urgent need for CAAN to monitor whether their staff in Lukla follow standard operating procedures or not.

The pilots have noted serious deficiencies in the quality of aviation meteorology services though the official aeronautical information publication for Nepal, issued by Civil Aviation Authority of Nepal, specifies that the high quality and timely services are rendered in accordance with the provisions of Annex 3: Meteorological services for international air navigation of the International Civil Aviation Organization.

“In view of the outstanding need for quality meteorological data, the ICAO in its annex introduced the requirement for a quality management system like ISO effective from 2012, as the aviation meteorology is essentially considered the backbone of civil aviation on matters of safety, regularity as well as efficiency.”

Apart from a problem in measuring observation and reporting various parameters, including wind speed, wind direction, pressure altitude, temperature, dew point and runway visual range, a senior captain claimed that the information on aviation weather provided by tower and DHM was often contradictory.

DHM’s Director General Rishi Ram Sharma, however, claimed that the department, with its limited resources, was providing high-quality service abiding by the standard operating procedures. “But, most of the pilots never attend Met briefing before flying aircraft,” he accused. Senior CAAN officials, as well as TIA tower controllers, refused to comment on pilots’ concerns.

Original article can be found here: http://thehimalayantimes.com

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